A better way to introspect ...
In general, a better way to do anything in any programming language is to not introspect if you can avoid it.
In general, in Raku, you can avoid manual introspection. See the section Introspection toward the end of this answer for further discussion.
... a capture
The best tool for getting the functionality that introspection of a capture provides is to use a signature. That's their main purpose in life.
I want to test the type of the first object in a signature
Use signatures:
proto handle(|) {*}
multi handle( Pod $node ) { ... }
multi handle( Str $string ) { ... }
multi handle( Nil ) { ... }
The following shows some ways I have found that work.
While they do what you want, they are essentially ignoring all of Raku's signature features. They reduce the signature to just a binding to the capture as a single structure; and then use manual introspection of that capture in the routine's body.
There's almost always a simpler and better way to do such things using signatures.
why does [|c[0].WHAT ~~ Rat
, with c[0] == 3/2
] not work?
I'll simplify first, then end up with what your code is doing:
say 3/2 ~~ Rat; # True
say (3/2) ~~ Rat; # True
say (3/2).WHAT ~~ Rat; # True
say |((3/2).WHAT ~~ Rat); # True
say (|(3/2).WHAT) ~~ Rat; # False
say |(3/2).WHAT ~~ Rat; # False
The last case is because |
has a higher precedence than ~~
.
Is there a better way than stringifying and testing for the string equivalent of the Type?
OMG yes.
Use the types, Luke.
(And in your use case, do so using signatures.)
Introspection
Compared to code that manually introspects incoming data in the body of a routine, appropriate use of signatures will typically:
If a language and its compiler have addressed a use case by providing a particular feature, such as signatures, then using that feature instead of introspection will generally lead to the above three benefits.
Languages/compilers can be broken into four categories, namely those that:
Do not do or allow any introspection;
Allow the compiler to introspect, but not devs;
Allow both the compiler and devs to introspect, but aim to make it a last resort, at least for devs;
Enable and encourage devs to introspect.
Raku(do) are in the third category. In the context of this SO, signatures are the primary feature that all but eliminates any need for a dev to manually introspect.
proto foo(| [$first, |]) { say $first.perl; {*}; }
, or maybe more clearly without the anonymous captures asproto foo(|all [$first, |rest]) { say $first.perl; {*}; }